"The first caveat requires insurance companies to inform consumers of what their plans do not include"

Oh, well, that's simple then: just send out millions of additional confusing letters to policyholders already befuddled by the last round. One wonders how much the Post Office paid him to propose this.

And I'm sure that carriers will be jumping all over themselves to take on the additional burden of managing two completely different - and often contradictory - policy forms. Piece o'cake.

But wait, there's more!

"The second requires the insurance companies to inform consumers what they could get on the Obamacare marketplace, that they could qualify for tax credits or qualify for Medicaid."

That's right, let's use the private sector to pimp for more free health care, because Medicaid is so flush with cash as it is.

The 800-pound gorilla currently slobbering all over the dining room table, though, is how to square this particular circle:

"It's the law of the land" vice "hey, let's keep changing it willy-nilly."

Isn't that pretty much what got us here in the first place?

And because this whole exercise is giving me a headache, here's some appropriate mood music:

"The first caveat requires insurance companies to inform consumers of what their plans do not include"

Oh, well, that's simple then: just send out millions of additional confusing letters to policyholders already befuddled by the last round. One wonders how much the Post Office paid him to propose this.

And I'm sure that carriers will be jumping all over themselves to take on the additional burden of managing two completely different - and often contradictory - policy forms. Piece o'cake.

But wait, there's more!

"The second requires the insurance companies to inform consumers what they could get on the Obamacare marketplace, that they could qualify for tax credits or qualify for Medicaid."

That's right, let's use the private sector to pimp for more free health care, because Medicaid is so flush with cash as it is.

The 800-pound gorilla currently slobbering all over the dining room table, though, is how to square this particular circle:

"It's the law of the land" vice "hey, let's keep changing it willy-nilly."

Isn't that pretty much what got us here in the first place?

And because this whole exercise is giving me a headache, here's some appropriate mood music: